Not a planned photo but, as I was in the West End after dark, I thought I would have a go at capturing its seedy glamour. I had hoped to take some photos in Soho, only Soho isn't really Soho anymore. Someone has been past with a broom and cleaned it all out. Only one, small section of Rupert Street that still has a couple of strip clubs and "massage" parlours. London has lost something as a result.
So, I took this instead.
I had a tentative try at nighttime, lit exteriors in the summer and struggled. I do now have some useful tips for trying those again. However, they won't apply to street shots, because tripods, long exposures and moving people don't go well together. So, any hints? As I hadn't planned this, I didn't have the ideal lens with me. I do have a fast, vintage Helios and I have read that using something like that wide open is the solution. However, would that shrink the depth of field to something unusable?
So, this was 1/250 (my default for when I am shooting a moving object. As I don't do that often, I am prepared to accept I can go slower), f/4.5 (seems I could have gone wider with this focal length on my zoom, but too busy framing the shot to check) and maxed out at ISO 6400 on auto ISO on a Fujifilm X-E1 (which has IS).
There was quite a lot of noise, and removing it and brightening the image softened the whole thing quite a bit.
I also tried a monochrome conversion, as I need the practice and the subject matter seemed to suit it. I might even prefer this version.
So, any C&C or general hints for this sort of thing would be very welcomed.